Video of Pakistani TV reporter Qaiser Khokhar has gone viral on social media after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s surprise visit to the neighbouring country. It is the hilarious way in which Qaiser Khokhar expresses his anguish for allowing Modi and his entourage consisting of 120 people to enter Pakistan without visa.

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The C-42 channel reporter keeps repeating the phrase Tauba Tauba holding both his ears several times while expressing his disapproval of Modi’s unplanned visit to Pakistan. And he does it on-air in his piece-to-camera even as his colleagues seem to be laughing in the background.

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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a stopover in Lahore on December 25 on way back from his visit to neighbouring Afghanistan. Modi accompanied by a few officials visited Nawaz Sharif’s residence in Lahore and wished him on his birthday while most of the Indian officials stayed at the airport. The visit, the first by an Indian Prime Minister in over a decade, took media by surprise.

In yet another shocking case of honour killing in Pakistan, a three months pregnant woman was stoned to death for marrying the man of her choice.

LAHORE: The 25-year-old woman, Farzana Iqbal, was attacked outside the Lahore High Court by two dozen men including her father and brother. She was at the court to testify that she had married of her own choice as her family members had accused her husband of kidnapping her and forcibly marrying her.

Farzana’s brother first shot at her but the bullet didn’t hit her. She started running to escape but fell down and the mob attacked her with bricks and killed her.

Farzana’s lawyer, Ghulam Mustafa informed media persons, “We were on our way from the office to the court, but all of a sudden the opposite party attacked us, and killed Farzana by stoning her to death with bricks. We have registered the First Information Report and her father has been arrested. Now, we will see how the police and court proceed in the investigation.”

A number of Pakistani women have no say in whom they marry and are often at the receiving end of their family’s anger if they go against their wishes. It is believed that if women marry on their own choice it will bring shame to the family.

Even the laws are biased towards the family members if they are perpetrators of such crimes as ‘honour killing’. Pakistan Human Rights Commission estimates that 869 women were killed for honour last year.